Citral A
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Citral is an acyclic monoterpene aldehyde, and being a monoterpene, it is made of two terpenoid, isoprene units. Citral is a collective term which covers two geometric isomers that have their own separate names; the E-Z notation, ''E''-isomer is named geranial (''trans''-citral) or citral A. The ''Z''-isomer is named neral (''cis''-citral) or citral B. These stereoisomerism, stereoisomers occur as a mixture, not necessarily racemic; e.g. in essential oil of Australian ginger, the neral to geranial ratio is 0.61.


Occurrence

Citral is present in the oils of several plants, including lemon myrtle (90–98%), ''Litsea citrata'' (90%), ''Litsea cubeba'' (70–85%), lemongrass (65–85%), Leptospermum liversidgei, lemon tea-tree (70–80%), ''Ocimum gratissimum'' (66.5%), ''Lindera citriodora'' (about 65%), ''Calypranthes parriculata'' (about 62%), petitgrain (36%), lemon verbena (30–35%), Eucalyptus staigeriana, lemon ironbark (26%), lemon balm (11%), Lime (fruit), lime (6–9%), lemon (2–5%), and Orange (fruit), orange. Further, in the lipid fraction (essential oil) of Australian ginger (51-71%) Of the many sources of citral, the Australian myrtaceous tree, Lemon Myrtle, Backhousia citriodora F. Muell. (of the family Myrtaceae), is considered superior.


Uses

Citral has a strong lemon (citrus) scent and is used as an aroma compound in perfumery. It is used to fortify lemon oil. (Nerol, another perfumery compound, has a less intense but sweeter lemon note.) The aldehydes citronellal and citral are considered key components responsible for the lemon note with citral preferred. It also has pheromonal effects in acari and insects. Citral is used in the synthesis of vitamin A, lycopene, ionone, and methylionone, to mask the smell of smoke. The herb Cymbopogon citratus has shown promising insecticidal and antifungal activity against storage pests.


Food additive

Citral is commonly used as a food additive ingredient. It has been tested (2016) in vitro against the food-borne pathogen Cronobacter sakazakii.


Medical exploration

In a report (1997), Citral is mentioned as cytotoxic to P(388) mouse leukaemia cells. It has 'strong' antimicrobial qualities.


Adverse effects

Two studies showed 1–1.7% of people to be allergy, allergic to citral, with allergies frequently reported. Citral on its own is strongly sensitizing to allergies; the International Fragrance Association recommends that citral only be used in association with substances that prevent a sensitizing effect. Citral has been extensively tested, with no known genotoxicity or carcinogenic effect.


See also

* Citronellal * Geraniol * Limonene * Nerol * Alcohol without liquid, Vaporizer


References

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External links


MSDS
Flavors Perfume ingredients Monoterpenes Conjugated aldehydes